MLB is introducing ads on uniforms and expanding its postseason, helping drive up the average value of its teams to a record $2.07 billion.
BY MIKE OZANIAN AND JUSTIN TEITELBAUM
Major League Baseball locked out its players for three months as they hashed out a new collective bargaining agreement. Two weeks after the sides struck a deal, clubs are already reaping the benefits.
Along with five years of labor peace, which provides economic stability, the new CBA introduces two new sources of sponsorship revenue, expected to begin with the 2023 season: jersey patches and helmet decals. That prospect has helped push up the average value of major league teams 9% over last year, to an all-time high of $2.07 billion, the biggest increase in four years.
Big-market teams are likely to benefit the most from the new sponsorships, which is one reason the New York Yankees are now the first baseball team worth $6 billion and trail only the Dallas Cowboys ($6.5 billion) among the sports world’s most valuable teams.
The new jersey patch deals are likely to be local, meaning teams will negotiate their own deals and keep all the revenue, whereas the helmet decal deals will probably be national, with MLB being in charge of the initiative and splitting the money evenly among its 30 teams. Over the last four years of the new five-year CBA, these sponsorships could generate more than $400 million combined annually, even better than the $225 million the NBA reportedly earns from its single stream of jersey patch deals.
“MLB could generate more money from its jersey patches than the NBA because of baseball’s slower pace of play and longer schedule,” says Peter Laatz, global managing director at sponsorship consultancy IEG. That’s good news for a sport where sponsorship revenue (from team, stadium and league-wide agreements) has increased a modest 6% annually since 2017, according to IEG estimates.
MLB SPONSORSHIP REVENUE
IEG’s sponsorship revenue estimates include sponsorship rights fees for MLB teams, venues and the league itself.
It won’t all be gravy, though. Some of the helmet money will be used to fund the CBA’s new $50 million-a-year bonus pool that was established for players not yet eligible for salary arbitration.
Another change in the new CBA that should help team values is the expansion of the playoffs to 12 teams, from ten, with the wild-card round expanded from one game to a best-of-three series. ESPN, which effectively had the rights to any additional playoff games under its existing MLB television agreement, will likely pay at least $65 million a year for the new postseason games, according to baseball insiders. That would work out to a bit more than $2 million per team and comes on the heels of new streaming deals with Apple and Peacock worth $115 million annually. The money from Apple, Peacock and ESPN will push baseball’s annual media rights past $2 billion, or at least 30% more than the previous round of media deals.
On the local level, cable television deals have a lot to do with baseball’s pecking order. While teams in the bottom third of Forbes’ ranking are lucky to get $60 million a year in local cable television rights fees, the Yankees raked in $135 million in cable money last season. The Los Angeles Dodgers, the second-most-valuable baseball team at $4.08 billion, led MLB with $189 million in cable TV fees.
CABLE CASH
These five teams had the highest local cable television rights fees in 2021.
All of the boosts to revenue will help teams recover from the past two seasons: an abbreviated 2020 without fans at ballparks and a full 2021 when most teams did not allow full capacity until July. In 2019, the last season before the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, teams’ operating income (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) averaged $50 million. In 2020 and 2021, those figures were -$60 million and $22 million, respectively. In other words, after pocketing operating income of $1.5 billion in 2019, MLB has lost $1.14 billion during the past two seasons combined. To help keep their balance sheets afloat, owners over the past two years have added more than $2 billion of debt (excluding holding company borrowings) and injected about $1.5 billion of equity, according to sports bankers.
The recovery is most evident with the Texas Rangers, who jumped 15% in value from last year, the most in baseball, to $2.05 billion. The Rangers had the misfortune of opening their new ballpark, Globe Life Field, in 2020, when the pandemic prevented fans from attending. But last season they had the fourth-highest average attendance in baseball and the highest in the American League (26,050). New ballparks tend to get top-shelf prices, and the Rangers have the ninth-highest average general ticket price ($38) and the fourth-highest premium seat price ($198) in baseball.
MLB’s Most Valuable Teams 2022
1. New York Yankees
Value: $6 billion
One-Year Change: 14%
Owner: Steinbrenner family
Operating Loss: $40 million
2. Los Angeles Dodgers
Value: $4.075 billion
One-Year Change: 14%
Owner: Guggenheim Baseball Management
Operating Loss: $8 million
3. Boston Red Sox
Value: $3.9 billion
One-Year Change: 13%
Owner: John Henry, Thomas Werner
Operating Income: $69 million
4. Chicago Cubs
Value: $3.8 billion
One-Year Change: 13%
Owner: Ricketts family
Operating Income: $68 million
5. San Francisco Giants
Value: $3.5 billion
One-Year Change: 10%
Owner: Greg Johnson
Operating Income: $32 million
6. New York Mets
Value: $2.65 billion
One-Year Change: 8%
Owner: Steve Cohen
Operating Loss: $96 million
7. St. Louis Cardinals
Value: $2.45 billion
One-Year Change: 9%
Owner: William DeWitt Jr.
Operating Loss: $34 million
8. Philadelphia Phillies
Value: $2.3 billion
One-Year Change: 12%
Owner: Middleton family, Buck family
Operating Loss: $17 million
9. Los Angeles Angels
Value: $2.2 billion
One-Year Change: 9%
Owner: Arturo Moreno
Operating Loss: $2 million
10. Atlanta Braves
Value: $2.1 billion
One-Year Change: 12%
Owner: Liberty Media
Operating Income: $83 million
11. Texas Rangers
Value: $2.05 billion
One-Year Change: 15%
Owner: Ray Davis, Bob Simpson
Operating Income: $97 million
12. Washington Nationals
Value: $2 billion
One-Year Change: 4%
Owner: Lerner family
Operating Income: $36 million
13. Houston Astros
Value: $1.98 billion
One-Year Change: 6%
Owner: Jim Crane
Operating Income: $29 million
14. Toronto Blue Jays
Value: $1.78 billion
One-Year Change: 6%
Owner: Rogers Communications
Operating Loss: $52 million
15. Chicago White Sox
Value: $1.76 billion
One-Year Change: 4%
Owner: Jerry Reinsdorf
Operating Loss: $10 million
16. Seattle Mariners
Value: $1.7 billion
One-Year Change: 4%
Owner: John Stanton, Chris Larson
Operating Income: $71 million
17. San Diego Padres
Value: $1.575 billion
One-Year Change: 5%
Owner: Ron Fowler, Peter Seidler
Operating Loss: $32 million
18. Detroit Tigers
Value: $1.4 billion
One-Year Change: 11%
Owner: Ilitch family
Operating Income: $31 million
19. Minnesota Twins
Value: $1.39 billion
One-Year Change: 5%
Owner: James Pohlad
Operating Income: $10 million
20. Colorado Rockies
Value: $1.385 billion
One-Year Change: 7%
Owner: Charles and Richard Monfort
Operating Income: $14 million
21. Arizona Diamondbacks
Value: $1.38 billion
One-Year Change: 5%
Owner: Ken Kendrick
Operating Income: $40 million
22. Baltimore Orioles
Value: $1.375 billion
One-Year Change: -4%
Owner: Peter Angelos
Operating Income: $83 million
23. Pittsburgh Pirates
Value: $1.32 billion
One-Year Change: 3%
Owner: Nutting family
Operating Income: $64 million
24. Cleveland Guardians
Value: $1.3 billion
One-Year Change: 12%
Owner: Lawrence and Paul Dolan
Operating Income: $71 million
25. Milwaukee Brewers
Value: $1.28 billion
One-Year Change: 5%
Owner: Mark Attanasio
Operating Income: $29 million
26. Cincinnati Reds
Value: $1.19 billion
One-Year Change: 10%
Owner: Robert Castellini
Operating Income: $0
27. Oakland Athletics
Value: $1.18 billion
One-Year Change: 5%
Owner: John Fisher
Operating Loss: $9 million
28. Kansas City Royals
Value: $1.11 billion
One-Year Change: 5%
Owner: John Sherman
Operating Income: $47 million
29. Tampa Bay Rays
Value: $1.1 billion
One-Year Change: 4%
Owner: Stuart Sternberg
Operating Income: $45 million
30. Miami Marlins
Value: $990 million
One-Year Change: 0%
Owner: Bruce Sherman
Operating Income: $25 million
Methodology
Forbes’ team values are enterprise values (equity plus net debt) calculated using a multiple of revenue. The multiples are based on historical transactions and the future economics of the sport and teams. Revenue and operating income (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization) are for the 2021 season and are net of revenue sharing, competitive balance taxes and stadium revenue used for debt service. Ownership stakes in regional sports networks, as well as related profits or losses, are excluded from our valuations and operating results, as are investments in real estate and other businesses. Sources include sports bankers, team executives, public documents like leases and filings related to public bonds, and media rights experts. Click here for the full list of values and additional information on every team.
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Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/mikeozanian/2022/03/24/baseballs-most-valuable-teams-2022-yankees-hit-6-billion-as-new-cba-creates-new-revenue-streams/